When Kentucky Senator and Republican presidential aspirant Rand Paul re-surfaced
the Monica Lewinsky scandal as relevant to Hillary Clinton’s presidential
candidacy, fellow Republican Karl Rove immediately took him to task on national
television.

“Frankly, Rand Paul spending a lot of time talking about the mistakes of Bill
Clinton does not look like a big agenda for the future of the country,” said
Rove.

Actually, it was Paul’s wife Kelley who first brought it up in a Vogue Magazine
interview. Why should Republicans be accused of a “war on women” when Mrs.
Clinton’s husband, former president Bill, chartered new territory in “predatory”
sexual behavior, argued Mrs. Paul.

When Senator Paul was asked about this on Meet the Press, he made the same
point.

According to the latest realclearpolitics.com average of national polls, Rand
Paul is a serious contender for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016.

So what’s up with one of the Republican Party’s pundit-in-chiefs, Karl Rove,
attacking one of his own party’s presidential contenders? Isn’t it the other
party’s candidates you are supposed to attack?

This, of course, is about the ongoing battle for the heart and soul of the
Republican Party, which is the preliminary to the main event – the battle for
the heart and soul of the nation.

If understood correctly, Bill Clinton’s mistakes, and how his wife Hillary
related to them, are indeed a “big agenda for the future of the country.” But
it’s not where Karl Rove wants to go, nor does the wing of the party that wants
to bury social conservatives. So he is already shooting intra-party friendly
fire.

Some feel that collapse of “traditional values” is irrelevant to the nation’s
future and getting back on track to fiscal soundness, growth, and prosperity.

But can anyone really believe that if a few hundred years ago almost half of
American babies were born to unwed mothers, if getting an abortion was like
taking an aspirin for a headache, if marriage and family was considered one of
many possible lifestyles, if marriage itself was open to redefinition based on
whim, we would be where we are today?

A free society, a society where politicians are not in your face and running
your life, requires personal virtue and responsibility.

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It is not accident that as values collapsed, as family disintegrated, the
welfare state, big government, has grown and taken its place.

In a recent Gallup poll, 71 percent between 18 and 34 years old said having a
child out of wedlock is morally acceptable, 49 percent said pornography is
morally acceptable, and 48 percent said teenage sex is morally acceptable.

Can anyone really believe that a society with these kinds of values can and will
have limited government?

We cannot underestimate the influence Bill Clinton, America’s first 60’s
generation president, played in creating this kind of popular culture. Once it
was okay that the President of the United States could betray his nation and his
wife and fornicate with a young intern in the Oval Office, the door was open to
almost anything.

We also cannot underestimate the impact on our popular culture and values that
the wife of this man – a woman who now aspires to be our next president - was
willing to tolerate this behavior and rationalize it away.

This is not the behavior of a strong, courageous woman but that of a weak,
unprincipled woman.

Latest data from the Census Bureau shows that 77.5 percent of families in the
top fifth of income earners are headed by married couples. Eight-three percent
of families in the lowest fifth are singles or single parent households.

Marriage and traditional values are the bulwark of a free and prosperous
society.

The Clintons helped break it all down. Karl Rove is dead wrong. This is a very
“big agenda for the future of the country.”

Star Parker is founder and president of CURE, the Center for Urban Renewal
and Education, a 501c3 think tank which explores and promotes market based
public policy to fight poverty, as well as author of the newly revised Uncle
Sam's Plantation: How Big Government Enslaves America's Poor and What We Can do
About It.